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PANDEMIC ALERT LEVEL
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Tracking the next pandemic: Avian Flu Talk

US Department of Defense Prepares

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    Posted: March 01 2006 at 2:47pm
DoD Officials Prepare for Possible Pandemic

By Elaine Wilson
Special to American Forces Press Service

FORT SAM HOUSTON, Texas, March 1, 2006 – Defense Department
officials are working to create a pandemic influenza plan in time for the
Department of Homeland Defense's end-of-March deadline, a DoD
medical official said Feb. 27.
The plan will lay out the department's roles and responsibilities in varying
stages of an avian influenza -- or "bird flu" -- outbreak, both at home
and overseas, said Ellen Embrey, deputy assistant secretary of defense for
force health protection and readiness, during a Joint Operations Medical
Managers Course in San Antonio.

DoD's work is a coordinated, integrated effort to ensure the department is
fully enmeshed in the national pandemic planning process, Embrey said.
"We've been working on and implementing training and policy guidance
to make sure we're prepared globally," said Embrey, who is responsible
for the department's medical readiness. "We have to ensure we have the
surveillance in place, installation preparedness, global understanding and
a stockpile of necessary components to mount an effective medical
response. It's an enormous task."

The DoD plan will be one part of an overall federal government plan,
Embrey said, adding that the Department of Health and Human Services,
the lead for U.S. government response, and Department of Homeland
Security, responsible for nonmedical response, also play a key role in the
nation's preparedness for an outbreak. "It's a team effort," Embrey said.
"The DoD has a unique set of assets that, when needed, could be used to
support the national response."

Under the broad DoD plan, each command also will have its own
implementation plan, a tasking that touches every installation throughout
the world. The overarching goals in this planning effort are to preserve
operational effectiveness and protect those most at risk. "Along with the
overreaching department plan, each combatant commander must have a
plan in place to address pandemic influenza, a potentially very infectious
disease," Embrey said. "Some people may be sick for a while, and the
commanders have to project how this could affect their ability to perform
the mission."

The collaborative planning effort will wrap up in a few weeks, and then
"all the hard work will become apparent," Embrey said.

Ongoing collaboration between military services and federal agencies is
indicative of an ongoing commitment for the Defense Department to work
toward an "interoperable and interdependent future," Embrey said.

"We need to start with 'morphing' work being done in each service. We
aren't fully integrated as a community and we need to come up with a
model that works for all of us," she said.

The joint environment is most evident in the medical arena, Embrey said,
a trend based on a DoD focus to provide "world-class medical care when
needed anywhere in the world."

The battlefield offers an example of the need for joint interoperability,
she said. When servicemembers are injured in combat, they are
administered care by a medic, whether Air Force, Navy or Army, then
evacuated by a Navy helicopter or Army Humvee to a forward surgical
team, which exists in all services. Once stabilized, they are brought to the
next point of care, if needed, by an Air Force fixed-wing aircraft back to a
major medical facility, such as the Army's Brooke Army Medical Center in
San Antonio or Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C.

"For us, it's making sure the capabilities we have in each service are
interchangeable, so, for instance, any service's medic can operate the
same equipment. We don't want to have to learn new equipment when
time is of the essence," Embrey said. "Through joint training,
standardization and combining and making efficiencies where we can, we
can ensure top quality care anytime and anywhere."

Statistics already point to the high standard of medical care for
servicemembers supporting operations Enduring Freedom and Iraqi
Freedom. "It's amazing; we have the lowest (rate of) disease (and) non-
battle injuries of any war," Embrey said, adding that servicemembers
supporting OEF and OIF visit a doctor two to 2.5 times a year on average.
"I go to the doctor more than that," she said. In comparison to the OIF/
OEF numbers, servicemembers at home average seven doctor visits per
year.

"The survival rate is unbelievable," she continued. "This is a direct result
of the great capabilities of the services put together. They are doing a
great job."

When people think of joint, Embrey said, they should also think beyond
the military services. "It's also about engaging our coalition partners; it's a
truly international effort," she said, "and, one of the department's biggest
ongoing challenges, and commitments."

Embrey urges everyone to visit the DoD Deployment Health and Family
Readiness Library at http://deploymenthealthlibrary.fhp.osd.mil/, which
includes information for clinicians, servicemembers, unit leaders,
veterans and their families on deployment-related health issues. "It's a
one-stop shop to learn about what the department is doing in the health
and readiness arena," she said.


http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Mar2006/20060301_4353.html
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 01 2006 at 3:01pm

If there is a Pdemic and it hits hundreds or thousands of U.S. cities at the same time, it will constitute a 'threat to national security'. The Feds will commandeer, conscript, change and create laws, even suspend the Bill of Rights if necessary.

The Union will survive. If you've thoroughly prepped you may not have to be part of this senario.

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